Virtual Tours: How To Make Heritage Journeys Workshop | Session 1
Virtual Tours offer virtual travel in time and space. A virtual traveler can explore historic buildings, dramatic landscapes of the discoveries of archaeology without leaving their home. Creating a virtual tour enables audiences to connect with heritage during lockdown and provides a valuable permanent resource.
Part 1: How to make a virtual tour
They can be as simple as a sequence of images with text or enable a visitor to become immersed in a different time and place.We will look at different types of virtual tours and provide a roadmap for creating each type. Come prepared and we will help you to make a tour and get it online.
Part 2: Showcase of example tours
We will look at examples of Virtual Tours and discuss practical experience of making and using Virtual Tours.In this workshop we will make use of the Google Street View app, this is available for IOS and android phones.We will also look at the roundme (www.roundme.com) platform for virtual tours. Roundme accounts are free to set up. We will also touch on using Google Maps for virtual tours.
About Digital Heritage Workshops: Bringing Museums to the Home
In response to the impact of Covid-19, *CUPIDO European Interreg cultural heritage project has collaborated with XpoNorth Heritage to hold a programme of eight online digital skills workshops aimed at the Heritage sector and facilitated by Dr Alan Miller and Catherine Anne Cassidy, from the Open Virtual Worlds Group at the University of St Andrews. The workshops are designed to help heritage organisations develop the skills to connect with existing and potential new audiences through digital media, covering topics such as digitising collections, photogrammetry, working with phones and commodity cameras to create 360 degree images and videos.
The impact of COVID-19 on the heritage sector has been huge with museums and visitor centres closed and potential visitors confined to their homes. At the same time there has been a flourishing of online heritage interactions, often through social media and accessible via devices available in the home.
This series of workshops aims to facilitate the sharing of skills and resources, whilst helping to equip heritage professional and volunteers in working with heritage online.
About CUPIDO
CUPIDO (Culture power: to inspire development in rural areas) Interreg North Sea Region cultural project is a cultural heritage project. Its overarching aim is about developing new business opportunities in the cultural and cultural heritage sector. This is to reinforce the economic position, competitiveness and social inclusion of local rural communities. CUPIDO is cultural activities such as art, dance, music and cultural heritage. The project has 16 partners from 7 countries and runs from 2019 to 2021.
Through CUPIDO, Highlands and Islands Enterprise has partnered with University of St Andrews to work with communities and social enterprises across the region on a programme of transnational digital activities designed to help commercialise the culture sector. More information about the CUPIDO project can be found here https://northsearegion.eu/cupi... and www.cupidoeu.org
Inspired by the #museumathome, #cultureathome and #heritageathome this series of workshops will help and support heritage volunteers, professionals and organisations connect audiences with both cultural and natural heritage.
A Facebook group called “Heritage Studio” will provide access to resources, opportunity for discussion and links to recording of past workshops. Feel free to join the group at:
www.facebook.com/groups/herita...
The CUPIDO archive and virtual museum system will provide a place to put things you create in the workshops and help connect it with the workshop activities.
The Open Virtual Worlds group is an interdisciplinary group based in the Interaction Lab, School of Computer Science in St Andrews University. Over the years they have collaborated with the Timespan Museum and Archive in many projects and are pleased Timespan will be contributing their expertise to these workshops. The workshops will also feature work from across the Highlands and Islands including the Tahai Chearsabhagh Museum, Highlanders Museum, Shetland Museum and North isles Landscape Partnership.